- The dollar slipped back as the President of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, James Bullard, said past experience indicates policy makers may not start to raise interest rates until early 2012.
- The euro pared some gains after data showed tame underlying US inflation data and a decline in housing starts lasts month, suggesting a US recovery will be a slow one.
- US housing starts tumbled 10.6% in October to their lowest level in seven months, which did little to enhance the outlook for the economy and lent some support to the dollar.
- Analysts also noted that traders were taking profits yesterday in the wake of the greenback's biggest rise in three weeks, with fresh data doing little to alter the view that US interest rates will remain at record lows well into 2010.
- In trading this morning, the euro has once again relinquished its gains, currently trading down 0.6%, as traders take profits from carry trade currencies and pare back “risk” positions.
Thursday, 19 November 2009
Euro made gains against the dollar yesterday but has relinquished them this morning as investors pare back "riskier" positions
The single currency traded strongly against the dollar, recovering losses incurred on Tuesday, to close the day back up near 1.50 at 1.4963.
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